Special keywords

Special passage tags

A left-to-right version of (set:) that requires the word into rather than to.

Rationale:

This macro has an identical purpose to (set:) - it creates and changes variables.
For a basic explanation, see the rationale for (set:).

Almost every programming language has a (set:) construct, and most of these place the
variable on the left-hand-side. However, a minority, such as HyperTalk, place the variable
on the right. Harlowe allows both to be used, depending on personal preference. (set:) reads
as (set: variable to value ), and (put:) reads as (put: value into variable ).

Details:

Just as with (set:), a variable is changed using (put: value into variable ). You can
also set multiple variables in a single (put:) by separating each VariableToValue
with commas: (put: 2 into $batteries, 4 into $bottles), etc.

it can also be used with (put:), but, interestingly, it's used on the right-hand side of
the expression: (put: $eggs + 2 into it).